Wednesday, June 16, 2010

NCHSAA, Coaches Collaborate on Football Playoffs Pod System, Adjust Regular Season Schedule

The often confusing and at times expensive N.C. High School Athletic Association football playoff system got a little more complex. It was announced on Tuesday, June 8th that a group of high school football coaches and NCHSAA staff met and have developed a method to implement the 256-team football playoffs using a pod system.

The qualifying teams will be placed in eight brackets, then will be split into East and West regions, and then will be split into West, Midwest, Mideast and East pods.

The change is being made to cut costs. In recent years, some teams at the extreme ends of the state have played each other in the early rounds of the playoffs. The pod system is expected to reduce costs in each bracket.

The seeding process and bracketing has several steps:

* Teams will qualify just as they have in the past.


* The first, second and third finishers in most conferences will advance, along with enough other teams, selected based on overall records, to fill the 64-team bracket in each classification.


* Qualifying teams will be arranged within a class based on enrollment. The 64 qualifying 4-A schools, for example, will be listed by enrollment. The largest 16 qualifying schools will be assigned to the big school, or AA bracket, and the 16 smaller schools will go to the A, or smaller school, bracket. The small process will be done in each classification.


* The 32-teams in the AA playoff classification will be divided into East and West regions based on geography.


* The 16 teams in each region will be seeded according to conference finish (no conference champion can be ranked below a No. 2 finisher) and overall records. An undefeated league champion will be ranked ahead of a league champ with a loss, for example.


* After the teams are seeded by region, they will be placed in one of the four pods based entirely on geography. It is possible that the top three or more seeds from a region could be in the same pod. The No. 4 seed in the East region, for example, could be the No. 1 seed in the
Mideast pod.

* Teams will be seeded in their pod, based on their initial seeding in the region. The pod seeding determines the pairings for the first three rounds. Regional finals will be played at the site of highest surviving seed from the regional seeding.


Avery head football coach Darrell Brewer likened the new format to the current format used in the state of Tennessee for their postseason football playoffs.

“I think the new system would cut down a lot on travel. The system is a lot like the Tennessee system, where teams play more regionally in the early rounds,” Coach Brewer said of the new format. “It might mean that more conference teams will be playing each other a second time in the playoffs, but to save money and time on travel those are the teams you should be playing. Either way the East and West will eventually meet.”

Ten head football coaches, representing each classification and region of the state, worked with the NCHSAA staff to develop the procedure.

"We tried to think of all the possibilities," said Que Tucker, the deputy NCHSAA commissioner. "It is an involved process, but you just take it step by step."

The Association met with coaches from across the state this past Tuesday to discuss the proposed pod playoff system. According to Rick Strunk, the associate executive director of the NCHSAA, the coaches are being asked to provide feedback, suggestions and ideas about the proposed system. Those ideas will then be brought to the Board of Directors for consideration.

Also at a NCHSAA meeting last month, the Board of Directors voted to change the length of football regular season from 12 weeks to 11 weeks. The number of playing dates, however, would not be reduced from 11, meaning teams would not get a bye week if they chose to play an endowment game.

“I think not having a bye week will make it a little more difficult because it will mean having to play 11 straight weeks of football,” Coach Brewer commented on the measure. “An open week can be both a good an bad thing. It can help your players heal who might be hurt, but it can also slow momentum if your team is playing well. We still intend to play an Endowment game regardless of the decision.”

The new season schedule is expected to be in place for the 2011 football season.